Heaven's Gate (Part 7)

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Things to beware of in 1997:
The West-coast and Middle-America. Middle-Europe and the Near East.
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Package to 'old friend' led to gruesome find
BY NORMA MEYER
COPLEY NEWS SERVICE
BEVERLY HILLS - It was a routine-looking Federal Express package, delivered
to a high-rise office building just a few blocks from tony Rodeo Drive.
Perhaps the only clue that something was amiss was its return address -
InterAct Entertainment Group - the same place it was sent.
The addressee, Rio DiAngelo, a Website designer at the firm and an
ex-member of the Higher Source cult, took the parcel home Tuesday night
without saying a word. On Wednesday morning, he appeared in the office of
the company's president, Nick Matzorkis, and made a chilling announcement
that would lead the two to discover 39 bodies some 100 miles away.
"He informed me that the entire Higher Source crew had committed suicide,"
Matzorkis said, recalling that DiAngelo showed him the Federal Express
package containing two videos and a note from the group. "The letter said
"By the time this is being read, we will have shed our containers,' which
is how they refer to their bodies."
Two hours later, before notifying authorities about a possible mass
suicide, Matzorkis sat in his Lexus truck while DiAngelo entered a Rancho
Santa Fe mansion to check on each and every one of his former friends. "He
went and saw every dead body," Matzorkis said. "He knew whose bed was
whose."
The dead had purple shrouds over their heads and wore brand-new black Nike
sneakers, with a white swoosh on the side. "They went out and got those
tennis shoes for this purpose, for whenever they would decide to leave this
planet," Matzorkis said.
DiAngelo, a shaven-head man in his early 40s, was hidden away somewhere
Thursday, on Matzorkis' advice. And Matzorkis, 34 - co-owner of 1-800-U.S.
Search, a lost-relative location service that has been featured on
"Leeza,"; former founder of the cartoon syndicate "Ziggy and Friends
Production," and producer of a Madonna CD - was clearly relishing his 15
minutes of fame.
In an office adorned with covers of the entertainment trade papers, Variety
and the Hollywood Reporter, Matzorkis said that about 16 members of the
cult had done freelance work for him on the Internet over the last eight
months. Computer whizzes and clean-cut, they were androgynous, self-styled
monks who wore buzz cuts, dressed in cotton clothes and talked about
leaving Earth on an UFO that would trail the Hale-Bopp comet. One female
member said the men, who like all followers were celibate, had their
testicles removed, he said.
The cult had even approached Matzorkis about producing a TV
movie-of-the-week, which would chronicle the group's history from its
inception 20 years ago as the "UFO Cult," he said. Matzorkis said he never
read the script he was given, but deemed the project "unrealistic."
Now, says Matzorkis, he thinks the group fingered him to be some type of
after-life spokesman. On his computer, he pulled up a cryptic E-mail
letter, dated Sept. 26, 1996, and signed, "Thanks, Higher Source Crew."
"Nick," it began, "When we met you last month we told you just a bit about
our monastery, but as you probably suspected, the unsaid picture was a
whole lot bigger than what was said."
After mentioning that the group was at "extremely critical crossroads," and
thinking about going more public, the letter continued: "For some reason,
we do tend to wonder if there is a greater purpose than our doing websites
for you, that put us in contact with each other. But of course, that is yet
to be determined."
Matzorkis stopped reading, and shook his head. "I think that is determined
right now," he said.
Two minutes after DiAngelo told him about the Federal Express package
Wednesday, Matzorkis said the duo were en route to the suicide scene. The
businessman said he didn't call police because "I thought that there were
truths and probably untruths."
"I thought maybe suicide to them is we go to the house and find that
there's no one there and they're beamed up," he said. "In all actuality,
they're living in Europe."
But after talking with his employee on the way down, Matzorkis said he felt
a sense of dread. One of the videos featured the cult leader "Do," speaking
about how the members spirits would transcend space. On the other tape,
pairs of followers spoke spontaneously and "about how excited they were to
be ridding their faults and moving on."
When they pulled up to the Mediterranean-style estate, Matzorkis said he
told DiAngelo he would pick him up in 10 minutes. He drove down the block
and back, then sat in the car in the driveway for another three minutes
before DiAngelo emerged, he said.
"He looked white as a sheet as he approached the truck and he got in the
car," Matzorkis recalled. "He said, "They did it."'
Matzorkis said he asked what they had done, and DiAngelo replied, "They all
committed suicide'... He said they're lying in their beds, in cots,
peacefully."
"I said, did it smell? I was trying to get to the bottom of whether this
was real," Matzorkis recounted. DiAngelo answered yes.
As Matzorkis drove off, he said a surprisingly calm DiAngelo remarked, "I'm
surprised how well this vehicle is dealing with this," referring to his own
body.
Matzorkis said he convinced DiAngelo to immediately make an anonymous call
to local authorities from a pay phone. He said his worker related the
address and said "40 people are dead in this house."
When the two returned to his offices, Matzorkis said he had DiAngelo make a
similar anonymous call to the Beverly Hills police. Then, fearing that the
calls were not taken seriously, Matzorkis in mid-afternoon said he notified
the sheriffs department again in Rancho Santa Fe and the Beverly Hills
police, explaining that he had driven an employee and ex-cult member down
to make the grisly find. Sheriff's deputies discovered the bodies just
after 4 p.m.
DiAngelo, who left the cult about five weeks ago, now believes he was
spared to carry on some sort of message, Matzorkis said. Shortly after
finding his onetime comrades dead from a drug and alcohol mixture, the
computer programmer declared, "being chosen for this is not an easy task,"
Matzorkis said.
The man who played a key role in uncovering one of the worst mass suicides
in U.S. history, however, was nowhere to be found Thursday. Phone listings
and voting and property records didn't turn up DiAngelo's name, and
although the building manager said people had been in Matzorkis' penthouse
Beverly Hills apartment, no one answered the door.
Matzorkis, meanwhile, kept busy with one interview after another. "Nick to
the set!" shouted a publicist, interrupting an interview so Matzorkis could
zip over to ABC-TV to chat with Peter Jennings.
As for DiAngelo, Matzorkis said he felt his employee wasn't ready yet to
handle the publicity. "I felt that he might be disappointed in the end
result. He was fearful that people would just glom on to what seems to be
the insanity of it."
(Contributing to this report was Copley News Service reporter Hildy
Medina.)